DC Independent Film Festival

DC Independent Film Festival
Location Washington, D.C.
Founded 1999
Awards Kennedy Center and US Department of State
Website https://dciff-indie.org

The DC Independent Film Festival (DCIFF) is the oldest independent film festival in Washington, D.C. Launched in 1999, DCIFF exhibits features, shorts and documentaries from around the world. The festival also hosts world premieres, seminars, and workshops, and also sponsors discussions on topics that impact independent filmmakers "On the Hill" hosted by the Congressional Entertainment Caucus.[1] The festival includes a dedicated POLIDOCS section for documentary films that shed light on human rights, politics and social justice and an international high school film competition started in 2013. The festival also has an oral history collection program Going to the Movies documenting the role of movie-watching in US cultural history.

DCIFF has continued to be an all volunteer-run festival. DCIFF is not a curated festival. With the exception of retrospectives and honorees, all films screened are chosen through the submissions process.

The festival was founded by Carol Bidault d'Isle who was Executive Director until 2011 when Deirdre Evans-Pritchard assumed the role. Evans-Pritchard is a trained anthropologist and folklorist who explores humanity's visualization of life and environment and the cultural place of the screen.

2010

Held at the Arleigh Burke Theater, the 2010 festival hosted the documentary "The Quantum Tamers: Revealing Our Weird and Wired Future and animated short Roue.[2]

2012

The 2012 festival was held between February 29 and March 4 and honored documentarian Les Blank.[3]

Awards

2018

The 19th annual festival was held between February 14 and 19th, 2018 and the Burke and Carnegie Theaters in Washington DC.

Awards

  • Best of Fest
    • This is Congo, directed by Daniel McCabe (USA / 2018 / 93mins)
  • Best Feature
    • Closure, directed by Alex Goldberg (USA / 2017 / 90mins)
  • Best Documentary
    • Generation Zapped, directed by Sabine El Gemayel, (USA / 2018 / 74mins)
  • Best Documentary Short
    • Daddy, directed by John Gallen & Alex Faoro (USA / 2018 / 30mins)
  • Best International Film
    • Little Fiel, directed by Irina Patkanian (Mozambique & USA / 2018 / 16 minutes)
  • Best Animation
    • Negative Space, directed by Max Porter, Ru Kuwahata (France / 2017 / 5mins)
  • Best Short (fiction)
    • Moving Violation, directed by Laura Hinson (USA / 2017 / 13mins)
  • Best of Metro DC
    • Change in the Family, directed by Sam Hampton, (USA / 2018 / 63mins)
  • High School Film Awards
    • 1st Place: Invisible, directed by Matthew Gannon (USA / 2017 / 7mins)
    • 2nd place: Aftershock, directed by Ryan Beard, Ceci Becker, Alexander Gaither, Stephen Gentry (USA / 2017 / 9mins)
    • 3rd place: CREDIT 1, directed by David Murillo (Chile / 2017 / 4mins)

References

  1. "DC Independent Film Festival". Retrieved 9 February 2012.
  2. Orndorff, Amy (26 February 2010). "2010 Washington DC Independent Film Festival". The Washington Post. Retrieved 9 March 2012.
  3. Joyce, Amy (29 February 2012). "DC Independent Film Festival kicks off today". The Washington Post. Retrieved 9 March 2012.
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